Fri., 18.03.1433 Hjr / 10.02.2012, 06:59 Emirate time РусскийEnglishtürkçeУкраїнськийعربي

main

mirrors

add. formats
Google
Kavkaz-Center
WWW
Our button

News feeds
 
UmmaEvents Also in this section

Turkey recalls envoy to Sweden over Armenia vote

Publication time: 12 March 2010, 09:12

The resolution including recognition of Armenian allegations was approved with 131 votes against 130.

 

Turkey recalled its ambassador to Sweden on Thursday after Swedish Parliament approved a resolution on Armenian allegations regarding 1915 incidents.

 

The resolution including recognition of Armenian allegations was approved with 131 votes against 130.

 

Foreign Relations Commission of the Swedish Parliament discussed the resolution on March 2.

 

Parliamentarians from the leftist Social Democrat Party, Left Party and Environment Party were in favor of the resolution.

 

Some parliamentarians of the rightist parties opposed the resolution saying Swedish Parliament was not an international court.

 

"Reactions"

 

"We strongly condemn this resolution, which is made for political calculations," Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan said in a statement, referring to the Swedish parliament vote.

 

"It does not correspond to the close friendship of our two nations. We are recalling our ambassador for consultations," Erdogan said, adding that he was cancelling a Turkey-Sweden summit scheduled for March 17.

 

President Abdullah Gul also said that the resolution did not have any credibility.

 

Gul said, "all we know how such decisions are made. It does not have any credibility for us."

 

Those who made this decision and who voted in favor of the resolution were not historians, he said.

 

Mehmet Kaplan, Turkish parliamentarian of the Environment Party, said the resolution could obstruct the recent developments in Turkey and called on the parliamentarians to vote against the resolution.

 

Zergun Koruturk, Turkey's ambassador to Sweden, told Swedish television programme Aktuellt that the vote would have "drastic effects" on bilateral relations which were unlikely to be overcome in a short time.

 

"I am very disappointed," Koruturk said. "Unfortunately, parliamentarians were thinking that they were rather historians than parliamentarians, and it's very, very unfortunate."

 

The U.S. House of Representatives Committee on Foreign Affairs last Thursday approved the resolution on Armenian allegations regarding incidents of 1915.

 

Turkey strongly rejects the genocide allegations and regards the events as civil strife in wartime which claimed lives of many Turks and Armenians.

 

Turkey and Armenia signed two protocols on October 10, 2009 to normalize relations between the two countries. The protocols envisage the two countries to establish diplomatic ties and open the border that has been close since 1993.

 

Turkey and Armenia also agreed to take steps to operate a sub-commission on impartial scientific examination of the historical records and archive to define existing problems and formulate recommendations, in which Armenian, Turkish as well as Swiss and other international experts would take part. However, on January 12, 2010, the Constitutional Court of Armenia declared a decision of constitutional conformity on the protocols. Turkey thought the fifth article of Armenian Constitutional Court's verdict regarding the protocols was against the target and basis of the protocols.

 

Source: Agencies

Kavkaz Center


SWEDEN. Chechen refugee released from police custody
Russian-sponsored deadly assault continues on Syria's Homs
RUSSIAN SPRING. Putin afraid of being toppled by West
Committee for US International Broadcasting accuses VOA and RFE/RL of working for the KGB
Putin is already dead
Russians hands over to Alawite regime list of targets for murder of Muslims
Besieged Homs endures Russian tank assault
Delegation of Austrian Parliament secretly meets with Kadyrov for coordination of 'return' of refugees
U.S. ambassador in Moscow accuses KGB TV channel Russia Today of lying
WHITE REVOLUTION. Ice cracks under Putin
RUSSIAN THREAT. Russia threatens Qatar to wipe this country off the map
Protest against Belgium's attempt to extradite former Ichkeria's soldier to Russia held in Helsinki
Putin did not like CE Emir Dokku Abu Usman's statement
Assad's regime in Syria steps up assault on Homs
Belgium ready to deport Chechen war hero for death in Russia
Syrian opposition threatens Russia with Jihad and expulsion of Russian thugs
Sweden continues to block information about arrested Chechen war hero
Syrian Alawite army steps up genocide of Muslims in Homs
Senator McCain warns bloody Russian dog Putin saying thug's days numbered
Mass arrests of Muslim youth in Kazakhstan
RUSSIAN SPRING. Russia's liberal intelligentsia begins to stir
Kadyrov’s espionage and terrorist network leader of Russian KGB, nicknamed Karamazov, deported from Austria
Protesters continue to battle police in Egypt
AUSTRIA. Chechen family to be deported to Russia, where it is threatened with persecution
WHITE REVOLUTION. This is serious message for Putin and his regime